is one of the most representative
idaenam politicians of South Korea. The phenomenon often leads to
political conservatism or
populism (Including both
left and
right sides).
The JoongAng, a South Korean
centre-right publication, reported that
Lee Jun-seok, the then leader of the
People Power Party, used
anti-feminist investigations to win the votes of . South Korea's
liberal Moon Jae-in government implemented a more feminist policy than the previous conservative government, and men in their 20s had severe antipathy against it.
Yoon Suk-yeol of right-wing conservative
People Power Party and
Lee Jae-myung of liberal
Democratic Party of Korea, who were the main candidates for the
2022 South Korean presidential election, took a negative attitude toward feminism to win the votes of . Centrist conservative-liberal
People Party's
Ahn Cheol Soo criticized Yoon and Lee for promoting
misogyny to pander to sexist . In 2024, during the
martial law crisis, the protests against Yoon invoking martial law were marked by a lack of turnout from young men. Yoon was then impeached, and during the
next presidential election held in 2025, the gender/age divisions persisted, as also Lee Jun-seok ran as a third-party,
Reform Party candidate, and received a plurality (37.2%) of the votes of men aged 18–29, beating out People Power Party candidate
Kim Moon-soo by a mere 0.3%. The support for Lee Jae-myung, who ran again and this time won the election, was once again the lowest amongst men aged 18–29, at just 24%; while people in their 40s and 50s, regardless of gender, again backed Lee Jae-Myung by about 70%. == See also ==